They called her vampire. They called her ugly, unattractive, unfit to vote. They called her destroyer of family and society. Nothing deterred the New Woman.
In the 1920s, a new youth culture emerged. Not simply a marker of age anymore, youth became a state of mind, the adherence to a separate culture with its own values and attitudes.
The New Woman was certainly born in the U.S., but manifestations of her appeared worldwide. And everywhere, she was a harbinger of modernity.
WWI was a pivotal moment in women’s history. For the first time, women stepped into the place of men in great numbers and showed to be able to do so.
In the 1910s, at the apex of the New Woman’s historical arc and right amid the fight for civil rights, women became vampires.
Women’s undergarments drastically changed during the New Woman’s historical arc. She shed layers of clothing, gaining in freedom of movement.
For a very long time, and through the entire New Woman’s historical arc, trousers remained controversial clothing for women #WomenFashion
The suffrage movement began their agitations for women’s rights in the first half of the 1800s, but it was after 1900 that the fight became more fierce. From this movement soon arose a broader understanding of women’s equality: Feminism.
The New Woman successfully turned her respectability into a weapon in the fight for change and equality.
Queer women’s relationships were long considered non-existent. But in the 1920s, things started to change.
The New Woman tried never to take a political stance in order to make her change acceptable. But politics and activism went after her.
The Oriental Style became extremely popular in the first decades of the 1900s and inspired everything that could be designed, including fashion